-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Several people asked for an update, so here it is. WhoWhere.com has been provided a dump of the password file that they may never have seen before, and they will be purging all 27,128 addresses therein from its database. Of course, many of those addresses may also be available from other, publicly available sources, and the Stanford community has been made well aware of whowhere.com's service (for user entries), so I expect that thousands of these addresses will return soon. I am confident that the Parsec folks are now acting in good faith, and that they are now sensitive to the relevant privacy and ethical issues. Myself, I'm cognizant of the hypocrisy and foolishness inherent in my position, but hey, we do what we can with what we got. Until the system is fixed, I gotta defend my people the best I can. I'm still reasonably serious about that "Hack Stanford Privacy" thing. If there is an easy way for outsiders to glean our whole kerberos namespace (outside of other major universities interconnected via AFS, and we'll get that fixed Real Soon Now), I want to know about it. - -rich [not on cypherpunks, so please Cc any responses] -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.2 iQCVAwUBMYWLdo3DXUbM57SdAQF9fAP+Pw4ra8Q5JfDy/DnmfrDauP5/4x+sH+SY qOwGk+GDgKW1p9yO+31OhuLsatPK5sXDGjTtwseRZXZXizylGmwQtgs2g9gQMxNR feZLyo0WBVnYw600ppms7nfay0uqEjM25nw/z+HDrUZ7VlWuAXZ/yctqLadiO3P8 +vCGbDfSQWA= =dP6F -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----